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Chapter no 7

A Reign of Rose (The Sacred Stones, #3)

KANE

BY THE TIME MY BOOTSย touched Shadow Woods soil I wasnโ€™t surprised to find tawny leaves and a pleasant chill in the air. Crisp and clear,

scented with rain-soaked moss and fresh soil. Arwen would have loved the patchwork of russet, crimson, and bronze overheadโ€”it wouldโ€™ve reminded her of her mother, her childhood. In Amber, the trees shed vivid leaves like these year-round.

Iโ€™d arrived in time for one last sunny autumn day before winter blanketed my keep. Summer had slipped away while Iโ€™d been freefalling through both snow and unending grief, and Iโ€™d made it back just in time for the tail end of the season that conjured my murderedโ€”

Get a hold of yourself. You canโ€™t rage at the seasons.

The luftalvor loosed a low grunt and cocked its pink snout at me. His eyes softened with something I couldnโ€™t place. Perhaps it was pity. I offered the creature a benign pat on his rump, and with a snuffle the woolly, winged white ox took off into the skies above.

His wings flapped against bright, clear blue.

Envy soared in my own chest. Longing. Sharp, splitting anguish. What Iโ€™d give for detachment.

And the decaying leaves crunching loudly underfoot, fragments of red and gold like faded confetti. And the sun too bright on my weak eyes and cracked lips.

Andโ€ฆperhaps there was no point in taking another step.

Nothing would bring Arwen back. And I was a selfish fucking bastard. I always had been. What shit did I give about the realms or my father or any of it?

I didnโ€™t want to be alive. I wanted to be with Arwen, and live if that was the only means to do so. Perhaps Iโ€™d end myself right now and let the worms feast. Perhaps Iโ€™d find her in the nothingness.

Despite how achingly appealing oblivion soundedโ€”how my boots had stalled, how my hands had begun to shake from sheer exhaustionโ€”I stalked for the sentry towers on reticent legs.

It would be an insult to her memory to give up now. An insult to her bravery. Her hope.

Shadowholdโ€™s walls were surrounded by the sentriesโ€”raised stone turrets that were manned all day and night, poised and ready to sound the alarm against anything meandering in my woods that shouldnโ€™t be.

โ€œMy king?โ€

The soldier that called down had found me before Iโ€™d found him.

I squinted up into the vibrant canopy until I could make out the stone battlement and the dark, skeletal face poking out of it. The man lifted the vicious helmet from his head and appraised me with something like awe.

Did I look that broken down? Had they not thought I would return? Did I blame them?

A blaring horn sounded. Boomed through the forest and into the keep ahead. When I moved past a copse of dark, gnarled trees, wrought-iron gates wrenched open before me with a creak. That wrenching sounded like the first notes of a song Iโ€™d memorized long ago.

Behind them, my gothic castle loomed. Shadowhold.

All the stained-glass windows lit from within, my banners and spires and stonework, etched and carved with such care. The sea of colorful wartime tents. A fortress Iโ€™d made into a home not only for myself, and for her, but for so many innocent mortals and halflings. Men and women and children who had built full, satisfying lives here.

And some ego, some pride didnโ€™t want them to see me limp through the gates.

Didnโ€™t want all of those people whoโ€™d relied on me to protect them, some of whom had crossed the channel with me and fled Lumera for a better life, to see their king ravaged by heartache and frostbite. Bruised and starved and damaged.

So I stood at the keepโ€™s precipice, frozen anew, my feet unwilling to propel me forward nor back as the hornโ€™s tune blared, signaling my return.

Still as death itself. Weaker than Iโ€™d ever felt.

The men in the barracks lowered their swords and crossbows and legs of meat. The women and children with apples and gourds halted at the brutal sight of me.

Silence rent the brisk autumn air.

One single glossy red apple toppled from a dropped wicker basket and rolled across the dry grass.

Thousands of eyes held mine. Not one person moved, or spoke, or so much as shifted. I wondered if they, too, were holding their breath.

And then, though I couldnโ€™t fathom why, one thick, heavy-browed soldier in only half his full armor knelt. A single knee pressed down to the dirt, helmet in his hands, eyes focused on me.

Before I could react, two soldiers beside him followed suit. Kneeling, removing their helmets. Gazes steadfast and unflinching.

Like a mighty ocean wave, cresting slowly and then crashing all at once

โ€”the entire barracks stooped to their knees before me. A sea of men, women, childrenโ€”soldiers, nobles, farmhandsโ€”bowing before their wayward king, returned home to them.ย Forย them.

And it was that truth that moved my feet down the wide avenue between all the kneeling faces. That truth that made my eyes burn and my throat bob.

Arwen was dead.

Iโ€™d not traveled to Pearl nor made my way home for her. And perhaps I hadnโ€™t wanted to admit that to myselfโ€”that no valiant act of mine might bring her backโ€”but I had found the White Crow, and I would slay my

father, not for Arwen, but for these people. These people who deserved a king that would fight for them no matter what heโ€™d lost.

Iโ€™d spent decades driven by revenge. But Arwen had only known of Lazarus for mere months, and had still given her life in hopes of protecting the citizens of Evendell. She, too, had loved these people. And even if I did want to join herโ€”to end myself and see if our souls might inhabit the same realm once moreโ€”I wouldnโ€™t. Not yet.

Not until I could take Lazarus to his grave alongside me. I would not leave these innocent people in his clutches.

Shame should have been what coursed through me as I beheld their steadfast facesโ€”Iโ€™d spent so long fighting for the wrong reasons, Iโ€™d not accomplished what Iโ€™d set out to do when Iโ€™d left them all, Iโ€™d not returned full-bloodedโ€ฆBut it was unwavering duty that filled my veins instead as I walked past the hundreds of kneeling men and women. That was what propelled my stiff legs forward.

Past each unyielding gaze. The uncompromising resolve in their eyes.

My people, who Iโ€™d gone to the ends of the continent for. I was like them now. I knew what it meant to be vulnerable. I knew how desperately they needed me. And though I hadnโ€™t known it, Iโ€™d needed them, too.

โ€œYouโ€™re alive.โ€

A slight pinch tugged the side of my mouth up as I turned to find my commander standing just outside the, pitch-black war tent. Standing, among a sea of kneeling men. Rigid jaw, cropped hair, hulking black armor glinting in the sun, his sea-green eyes as resolute as his soldiers around him.

I didnโ€™t trust my voice not to crack around the tightness in my throat as I said, โ€œGive me a little credit.โ€

Griffin nodded, as if I hadnโ€™t been joking, and then he, too, knelt before me. โ€œWelcome home.โ€

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MY MUSCLES BARKED WITH EVERYย step across the castle grounds, past thick picnic blankets and baskets piled high with the harvest. I was sore from the

journey.ย Mortallyย sore, which was even less pleasant than usual and made me feel all too breakable.

Griffin swung the thick door of his cottage open and I stepped inside. A couple of years ago heโ€™d built the place himself, nestled at the edge of the keep. Heโ€™d never liked sleeping in quarters made up each day by servants, nor having guards man his hall at night.

I sat down at his kitchen table with a wince. The marble tabletop was clean save for a heavy-looking sword and whetstone. Griffin loved nothing if not a solitary, tactile activity.

โ€œWhere have you been, Kane?โ€

Though he was my oldest friend, Iโ€™d likely spent less than two hours of my life in Griffinโ€™s austere cottage. The walls were crafted of bare, whitewashed wood. The bed, on a loft above us, folded with care. Simple white cotton sheets. No books, no leafy greenery, no art. No clutter at all. โ€œWhat are you, a monk?โ€

Griffin ignored me, closing the door and sitting backward on the other pale wooden chair to face meโ€”two chairs. Griffin had two chairs. โ€œYou stopped sending ravens a week ago. I had a convoy ready to leave at first light.โ€

โ€œWe need to get you more chairs,โ€ I said, twisting to scan the space. โ€œKane,โ€ he bit out, voice low. โ€œWhat happened?โ€

I wiped a finger down Griffinโ€™s cold table, alongside the dull sword. Not a lick of dust. โ€œI found the White Crow. He wasnโ€™t so much a sorcerer as a Fae God.โ€

Griffinโ€™s jaw tensed. โ€œWhat the fuck.โ€ โ€œI had similar sentiments.โ€

โ€œAnd what? He helped you?โ€ โ€œHe stripped me of my lighte.โ€

My commander did not show emotion. Not even when his own parents had been hanged before him. But at my words, Griffinโ€™s sea-green eyes practically churned. โ€œKaneโ€”โ€

โ€œNot permanently.โ€ I heard air flee him in relief. โ€œIf I touch the Blade of the Sun, Iโ€™ll be reborn as full-blooded Fae. I can take her place in the

prophecy and kill my father.โ€

โ€œAnother hunt for the blade.โ€ Griffin sighed. โ€œWhy do I feel like weโ€™ve done that one before?โ€

โ€œWeย arenโ€™t doing anything.โ€ My eyes fell over his bland glass-fronted hutch and unlit hearth despite the autumn chill. โ€œIโ€™m leaving tonight for Willowridge. Iโ€™ll have Briar open the portal for me. Unless our magically challenged witch is fixed?โ€

Griffin made a face. โ€œSheโ€™s still with Briar. The progress hasnโ€™t been excellentโ€ฆBut I donโ€™t really know. She doesnโ€™t speak to me much these days.โ€

Any part of me that wanted to jest about his Mari problems withered with the look of true regret in his eyes. โ€œHow come?โ€

โ€œShe blames me. And you. For Arwen.โ€

My blood turned with the mention of her name. โ€œYou had nothing to do withโ€ฆwhat happened that day.โ€

โ€œI told her I knew about Hemlock. And that I let you both go alone. She has every right to hate me.โ€

Guilt slammed into me like a hammer across an anvil.ย Iย was the only person who had allowed Arwen to jump from that platform. Iโ€™d regret it every day of my now stunted, mortal life. Griffin didnโ€™t deserve that same fate.

I opened my mouth to tell him as much, but his flat look told me he wasnโ€™t interested in my pity. Changing course, I lilted, โ€œWhen you sayย not excellentโ€”โ€

โ€œNo substantial magic, last I heard.โ€ โ€œItโ€™s been almost two months.โ€

Griffinโ€™s jaw went rigid. โ€œSheโ€™s terrified.โ€ โ€œOf what?โ€

โ€œFailing everyone, I think,โ€ he said, eyes on his knuckles, stretched white across his chairback.

โ€œAnd what of the little seerโ€™s father?โ€

Itโ€™d been a promise weโ€™d made to Beth, the girl who could divine the future, back in Cragโ€™s Hollow. To rescue her father, Vaughn, from Amberโ€™s

clutches, if he was still alive.

โ€œWe found him, actually. He was being kept in the same encampment Halden and his men brought Arwen to, back in Peridot.โ€

Again with her nameโ€”ice shards against my heart. My fingers curled around the edge of the table.

โ€œOn her parentsโ€™ urging we brought Beth back to Shadowhold for her safety.โ€ His mouth twisted into a knot. โ€œSheโ€™s a littleโ€ฆโ€

โ€œYeah. Any visions?โ€ โ€œNothing yet.โ€

The sun flecked through the half-moon-shaped window above the stony kitchen, turning the clean marble table between us into a glowing sprawl of light.

โ€œYou know Iโ€™m coming with you,โ€ my commander said after a minute. โ€œNo, youโ€™ll stay here. Ready the troops for war in case I fail.โ€

โ€œIn case you fail? You mean in case you, a mortal, are killed in Lumera?

You will be.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s nice to feel so supported.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not fucking kidding, Kane.โ€ A muscle feathered in Griffinโ€™s jaw. โ€œYou should have six armies backing you. Or thirty.โ€

My blood simmered. โ€œWe donโ€™t have six armies, do we? Unless thereโ€™s been any word from Citrine? Or the traitor?โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ he said, scratching the back of his neck. โ€œA few things have transpired.โ€

I readied myself. โ€œWonderful news only, Iโ€™m sure.โ€

โ€œAmber Kingdom is no longer stationed in Peridot. Amelia was reinstated as the rightful queen. Sheโ€™s rebuilding Sirenโ€™s Bay, and sent you a letter saying her army wonโ€™t fight alongside us. I donโ€™t think theyโ€™ll fight at all.โ€

โ€œShe sent a fuckingย letter?โ€ If I had my lighte I mightโ€™ve obliterated Griffinโ€™s spotless kitchen.

โ€œShe did.โ€

โ€œQueen of the Peridot Provincesโ€ฆโ€ I hummed to myself. โ€œIs Eryx furious? Usurped by his own daughter?โ€ I could only imagine the look on

the vainglorious bastardโ€™s face. โ€œEryx is dead.โ€

The already cool stone home dropped in temperature. Perhaps it was my new, mortal constitution, but I fought a shiver.

Amelia. Capable of deceit, betrayal, and now patricide. Some queen Peridot had earned.

โ€œWhen our convoy arrived at Fedrikโ€™s ship in Sandstone, to send the king to Citrine as weโ€™d planned, Eryx was found poisoned in the back of the carriage.โ€

โ€œAnd Citrine?โ€

โ€œBroderick and Isolde think we tried to frame Fedrik for Eryxโ€™s murder.

Itโ€™sโ€ฆโ€

โ€œAbsurd,โ€ I growled. โ€œTheyโ€™re imbeciles.โ€

โ€œMaybe we sail there once more. See if begging on our hands and knees changes anything. Iโ€™m not above it.โ€

โ€œHa,โ€ I said without humor. โ€œWe should find out.โ€

Griffin had been my closest friend since childhood. My only real friend, the past few decades. Not only that, but a loyal, self-sacrificing, and trustworthy commander of my army. Heโ€™d been there for me through everything. For Arwen, too.

And I knew it wasnโ€™t fair to saddle him with this. Iโ€™d be leaving him with nothing. Worse than thatโ€”a legacy of loss and broken alliances. An unwinnable war on the horizon. But the people out there who had knelt before meโ€”the people of this entire continentโ€”they needed Griffin. They deserved a leader who was moral and steadfast. Who was good.

โ€œYouย should find out. Iโ€™m going to Lumera. Itโ€™ll be your problem either way, Griffin. When Iโ€™m goneโ€ฆI want you to take my place on the Onyx throne.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t.โ€ He sighed, lowering his head to rub his temples. โ€œDonโ€™t say that.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re the only one I trust.โ€

When Griffinโ€™s gaze met mine, it was mournfully grim. โ€œI have no interest in ruling a kingdom.โ€

My smile was faint. โ€œThatโ€™s why youโ€™ll be great at it.โ€ โ€œWhat ifโ€”โ€

โ€œThere are no what-ifs. Iโ€™m either going to succeed in finding the blade and kill my father, which will grant my death as well, or Iโ€™m going to die trying.โ€

โ€œSo, whatโ€ฆ?โ€ Griffin swallowed audibly, the barest hint of emotion flashing across his face. โ€œYouโ€™re saying this is it?โ€

My gaze found the stony floor, safe from Griffinโ€™s eyes. โ€œYeah. This is

it.โ€

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